Skip to main content
Truck Drivers, Weight Loss, and the Missing Piece: A Look Inside The Obesity Code
4:37

Truck drivers face the highest rates of obesity in any major workforce in America. And if you’ve ever struggled with your weight - or watched someone you love struggle - it’s hard not to feel frustrated, confused, or overwhelmed.

In The Obesity Code, Dr. Jason Fung explains why much of what we’ve been told about weight loss is simply wrong. Calories are not the problem. Willpower is not the problem. The real culprit? Insulin - and how often we spike it through food and meal timing.

This book is a game-changer for anyone ready to step off the weight-loss rollercoaster and understand the deeper, hormonal causes of fat gain.


⚖️ Calories Are Not King. Hormones Are.

Most diets obsess over how many calories you eat. But Dr. Fung argues that obesity is not about calories - it’s about insulin.

“Obesity is a hormonal imbalance, not a caloric one.”

Here’s why that matters:

  • All foods raise insulin levels, but sugars and refined carbs spike it the most
  • Constant eating - especially 6 meals a day - keeps insulin elevated
  • Chronically high insulin leads to insulin resistance, fat storage, and eventually type 2 diabetes


🍽️ What You Eat and When You Eat Matters

We often ask, “What should I eat?” But when you eat is just as important.

In the 1960s, most people ate 3 meals a day. Today, we eat 5–6 times daily. That means insulin is constantly elevated, and fat is never burned.

Dr. Fung’s solution?

Intermittent Fasting.

Fasting creates periods of low insulin so your body can finally access stored fat. It’s not starvation. It’s what your body was designed to do - take breaks between meals.

“The most effective method of reducing insulin is to avoid all food for a while.”


🧠 Breakfast Isn’t Sacred

We’ve been told breakfast is “the most important meal of the day,” but Dr. Fung says otherwise:

  • If you’re not hungry in the morning, don’t eat
  • Avoid sugary cereals and processed carbs - they spike insulin and make you hungrier
  • Skipping breakfast is fine - as long as you don’t replace it with a mid-morning donut


🥤 Diet Soda? Not the Answer

Diet drinks might not have sugar, but that doesn’t mean they’re harmless.

  • Artificial sweeteners still raise insulin
  • They disrupt your gut, confuse your brain, and do nothing to stop weight gain
  • They are, in Fung’s words, "very bad"

If your goal is long-term weight loss, ditch the diet soda and go for water, sparkling water, or herbal tea instead.


🌾 Cut the Refined Grains

White flour, white rice, and enriched grains:

  • Have no nutritional value
  • Spike insulin more than almost any other food
  • Should be dramatically reduced or eliminated

Instead, focus on fiber, natural fats, vegetables, and whole, unprocessed foods.


😴 Sleep and Stress Still Matter

Truckers often face short, poor-quality sleep and high stress. Both are major contributors to chronically elevated cortisol, which increases insulin and leads to weight gain.

Drivers average just 4.78 hours of sleep per night, according to one study.
This chronic sleep deprivation is directly tied to obesity and insulin resistance.

Mindful movement, walking, deep breathing, and sleep improvement strategies are part of your weight loss toolkit.


🧪 What Works? A 2-Step Strategy

Dr. Fung’s 5 Dietary Rules:

  1. Reduce added sugars
  2. Reduce refined grains
  3. Moderate protein intake
  4. Increase natural fats (avocados, nuts, olive oil, etc.)
  5. Increase fiber and vinegar

Combine that with better meal timing:

  • Skip snacks between meals
  • Try 24–36 hour fasts 1–2x per week if it fits your lifestyle
  • Eat fewer, higher-quality meals


🧬 The Science of Fasting

Fasting isn’t new. It’s ancient. And it works:

  • Lowers insulin levels
  • Triggers fat burning (not muscle loss)
  • Boosts metabolism
  • Reduces hunger hormones
  • Increases energy and clarity

“Fasting is not starvation. It’s the most efficient and consistent way to lower insulin.”

Even short daily fasts (like 16 hours) or eating one meal a day can lead to better fat loss than eating three meals with the same calories.


🎯 Project 61’s Takeaway

For drivers, obesity is a real threat - to health, independence, and longevity. But the good news is this:

  • You don’t need to count every calorie
  • You don’t need to exercise for hours a day
  • You don’t need to feel hopeless about your health

What you do need is a shift in thinking:

✅ Eat real food
✅ Eat fewer times per day
✅ Allow your insulin to fall
✅ Sleep, move, and manage stress
✅ Let your body do what it was designed to do: burn fat